Monochrome 128x32 SPI OLED graphic display

Description:

These displays are small, only about 1" diagonal, but very readable due to the high contrast of an OLED display. This display is made of 128x32 individual white OLED pixels, each one is turned on or off by the controller chip. Because the display makes its own light, no backlight is required. This reduces the power required to run the OLED and is why the display has such high contrast; we really like this miniature display for its crispness!

The driver chip SSD1306, communicates via SPI only. 4 or 5 pins are required to communicate with the chip in the OLED display.

The OLED and driver require a 3.3V power supply and 3.3V logic levels for communication. To make it easier for our customers to use, we've added a 3.3v regulator and level shifter on board! This makes it compatible with any 5V microcontroller, such as the Arduino.

The power requirements depend a little on how much of the display is lit but on average the display uses about 20mA from the 3.3V supply. Built into the OLED driver is a simple switch-cap charge pump that turns 3.3v-5v into a high voltage drive for the OLEDs, making it one of the easiest ways to get an OLED into your project!

You can download our SSD1306 OLED display Arduino library from github which comes with example code. The library can print text, bitmaps, pixels, rectangles, circles and lines. It uses 512 bytes of RAM since it needs to buffer the entire display but its very fast! The code is simple to adapt to any other microcontroller.

Dimensions:

PCB: 23mm x 33mm (1" x 1.3")

Display area: 7mm x 25mm

Thickness: 4mm

Display details:

Diagonal Screen Size：0.91"

Number of Pixels：128 × 32

Color Depth：Monochrome (White)

Module Construction：COG

Module Size (mm)：46.30× 11.50 × 1.45

Panel Size (mm)：30.00 × 11.50 × 1.45

Active Area (mm)：22.384 × 5.584

Pixel Pitch (mm)：0.175 × 0.175

Pixel Size (mm)：0.159 × 0.159

Duty：1/32

Brightness ( cd/m2)：150 (Typ) @ 7.25V

Interface：4-wire SPI

Display current draw is completely dependent on your usage: each OLED LED draws current when on so the more pixels you have lit, the more current is used. They tend to draw ~15mA or so in practice but for precise numbers you must measure the current in your usage circuit.